To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

outside compressor room

Jeff May

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 1, 2012
Messages
343
Location
Fayetteville, PA
Just finished this up last weekend.
Contains 2 60 gal compressors.
Also has storage space for oils and extra stuff that was hanging in my shop area.
Found the louvers at Home Depot for about $2.00 each. Left the soffit in the front open, added 1/4" mesh wire to keep critters out, hopefully with louvers at the bottom and top plus the soffit area they will stay reasonable cool.
 

Attachments

  • IMAG0197.jpg
    IMAG0197.jpg
    143.6 KB · Views: 72
  • IMAG0198.jpg
    IMAG0198.jpg
    147 KB · Views: 62
  • IMAG0199.jpg
    IMAG0199.jpg
    151.6 KB · Views: 65
  • IMAG0200.jpg
    IMAG0200.jpg
    150.7 KB · Views: 66
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

owenst7

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2011
Messages
632
Location
Anchorage/Reno
Just finished this up last weekend.
Contains 2 60 gal compressors.
Also has storage space for oils and extra stuff that was hanging in my shop area.
Found the louvers at Home Depot for about $2.00 each. Left the soffit in the front open, added 1/4" mesh wire to keep critters out, hopefully with louvers at the bottom and top plus the soffit area they will stay reasonable cool.

Did you use shingles on the roof?
 

600SL

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 26, 2012
Messages
1,794
Location
Connecticut
Just finished this up last weekend.
Contains 2 60 gal compressors.
Also has storage space for oils and extra stuff that was hanging in my shop area.
Found the louvers at Home Depot for about $2.00 each. Left the soffit in the front open, added 1/4" mesh wire to keep critters out, hopefully with louvers at the bottom and top plus the soffit area they will stay reasonable cool.

2 60 gallon compressors that's my plan. Two 3.7HP compressors = 1 7.5HP compressor at about 1/3rd the cost.

My outside compressor shack was designed to hold either 2 3.7HP or 1 7.5HP. But I don't have room to store anything else in there.
 

RickP

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2013
Messages
1,547
Location
Annapolis, MD
also for heat was thinking of puting in a heat light or some type of small portable heater that has a thermostat.

If you want a reliable and inexpensive heater, try an electric baseboard with a built-in thermostat. You'll already have 240v out there, so it makes the installation pretty easy. Just turn the thermostat all the way down and it will stay above freezing out there.

Here are links to the ones I used:

$22 Baseboard

$18 Thermostat
 

RickP

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2013
Messages
1,547
Location
Annapolis, MD
ok guys thanks for the replys and sorry for not responding until now... been busy with the house.... so where do i get the the auto drain valve? now as far as noise control what do you suggest? what about vents for cool air and heat? my plan is to build the compressor room a little oversized so i could get to it easy and for other storage....

You can try the one at Horrible Freight:
$7 Automatic Drain Kit

It got mixed reviews though, so you might try a quality one instead. Also, you should install a disconnect switch for the compressor inside the garage so it's easy to turn it off without going out to the shed.
 

Jeff May

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 1, 2012
Messages
343
Location
Fayetteville, PA
I used shingles.
In regards to the auto drains.
I found some on ebay for about $27.00 each. They have timers for how long to purge and how often.
I think there are different size pipe fittings on them so you have to look at them closely.
I got 1/2" pipe threads on mine. So far they are working great. Both compressors purge at 45 minute intervals for approx. 1/2 second.
 
OP
B

BEAVO

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2010
Messages
239
Location
wash ch ohio
nice work jeff..... could you post some pics of the inside? also i was thinking of making it like a shed instead of concrete floor.... more less just for the expense.....
 

air8

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 3, 2013
Messages
75
Agreed, nice building Jeff. Will you have to keep the ground cleared of snow and water in front of the door? I was planning to have a concrete pad above the grade at minimum 4" and preferrably 6".
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Jeff May

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 1, 2012
Messages
343
Location
Fayetteville, PA
Here's a few pics of the inside. Not the best, they were taken late afternoon with my phone.
There is about a 2" drop at the door. Plus the fall is greater from the door towards the driveway area than what the pics show, still, I will have to keep an eye on it this winter.
FYI, I poured a 4" pad for a floor.
It's still a little cluttered inside. I'm slowly moving things I don't use a lot into it.
The drum is oil for my furnace.
 

Attachments

  • IMAG0242.jpg
    IMAG0242.jpg
    141.3 KB · Views: 38
  • IMAG0241.jpg
    IMAG0241.jpg
    139.7 KB · Views: 38
  • IMAG0240.jpg
    IMAG0240.jpg
    138.5 KB · Views: 45

cagullett1

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2013
Messages
2,203
Location
North Texas
Here's a few pics of the inside. Not the best, they were taken late afternoon with my phone.
There is about a 2" drop at the door. Plus the fall is greater from the door towards the driveway area than what the pics show, still, I will have to keep an eye on it this winter.
FYI, I poured a 4" pad for a floor.
It's still a little cluttered inside. I'm slowly moving things I don't use a lot into it.
The drum is oil for my furnace.

Do you have a switch to kill power in the garage so that you don't have to go out to the shed to turn the compressors off? I will be building a small shed similar to these soon on skids and can't decide if I want to add a kill switch inside or not.

On a side note, I plan to use the black sound board as my inside walls. Its cheaper than OSB (if I saw the price correctly today at HD) and should help keep the noise out of our master bedroom that the shed will be up against.
 

Jeff May

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 1, 2012
Messages
343
Location
Fayetteville, PA
Yes, I have two switches on the other side of the wall. The air lines are flexibal hose. They go through the wall and attach to a manifold of sorts on the other side.
 

air8

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 3, 2013
Messages
75
Jeff, Do you have much run time on the current setup? I'd like to know your setup for moisture draining.
 

cagullett1

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2013
Messages
2,203
Location
North Texas
I recently acquired a free Devilbiss oiless "5hp" that is LOUD. I put together a little shed for it from scraps a few weeks ago. It's 3'x3' and the compressor only raises the temperature a few degrees when it's running (although I haven't run it continuously in real hot temperatures yet, only having it kick on a few times in 20 minutes or so). I did put this 50 cfm bathroom fan in the "attic" and the exhaust blows through passages in the 2x4s that I cut out with a hole saw. It's plugged in to a christmas light switch that's in the garage, and I haven't even been using it. The passages split and recombine the exhaust stream around bends to disrupt the flow before it makes its way to the vent on the opposite side. I did a similar setup for the intake through the wall. I didn't insulate anything at all, but it is double-walled osb to make it more rigid. If you put your hand on the outside while the compressor is running, you can't feel any vibration. This double-wall setup is significantly quieter than the ones I've made in the past that were single wall with blue board styrofoam. Might just be due to being sealed up better, but either way it was cheaper and easier. I did put 1" of Styrofoam under the EPDM but above the attic airspace because it is black and I figured it would drop the temps from the sun.

You can stand right next to it while the compressor is running now and have a conversation at a normal volume. It isn't any louder than the house's AC unit right next to it. It's about the same low pitch as the AC also, which is a lot more bearable than the high pitched noise it was before. If you're inside the house on the opposite side of the wall, you actually can't even hear it unless it's silent and you listen for it. It's right up against the headboard of my bed, and it's quieter than the fan in the adjacent bathroom.

can someone explain the purpose behind these weird exhaust/intake configurations I've seen that disrupt the air flow? Not sure what the purpose is.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom